The Homeric Iliad
Homer, The Iliad. Digital edition based on: Homeri Opera in five volumes. T.W. Allen, ed. Oxford. Oxford University Press (1920). Original SGML digital edition The Perseus Project, G. Crane, ed. This derived edition, C. Blackwell, Furman University. 2026. Source texts and code for this page (and others) on GitHub. Licensed CC-BY-NC. urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0012.tlg001
The Iliad is an ancient Greek epic poem traditionally attributed to the poet Homer and composed in the eighth century BCE. Written in dactylic hexameter verse, it stands as one of the earliest and most influential works of Western literature, originating from an oral tradition of performance in which bards used formulaic phrases, epithets, and type-scenes to compose spontaneously. The poem, divided into 24 books, focuses on a limited span of roughly forty days during the tenth year of the Trojan War rather than the entire conflict.
The narrative centers on the wrath (mēnis, μῆνις) of the Greek warrior Achilles, sparked by a quarrel with Agamemnon over the captive woman Briseis, which leads Achilles to withdraw from battle and pray for Zeus to favor the Trojans. This absence causes devastating losses for the Greeks, culminating in the death of Achilles' companion Patroclus at the hands of the Trojan prince Hector. Enraged by grief, Achilles reenters the war, receives new armor from the god Hephaestus, slays numerous Trojans including Hector in single combat, and desecrates Hector's body before ultimately returning it to Priam, king of Troy, in a poignant scene of mutual recognition and shared mourning. The poem ends without depicting the fall of Troy, emphasizing instead the consequences of Achilles' anger and a temporary reconciliation.